Tag Archives: Review

The latest immersive experience to craze to hit London is a big one with adventure and challenges up to your eyeballs. It’s also a chance for fans of cult favourite British TV show The Crystal Maze to live out their dreams of participating in the show. A full building has been converted into a replica of […]

Lady Chastity’s Reserve, The Four Thieves Pub – Review Handmade Mysteries 4 stars For Lady Chastity’s Reserve, 2-5 players are locked in a small dusty room fully decked out as if a key has turned and preserved a time capsule to times gone by. You have one hour to search for clues, solve puzzles and uncover […]

Time Run is a fun and intelligent new escape room adventure that lets you travel through space and time whilst solving puzzles and unlocking safes on the hunt for a missing relic – all while you have just sixty minutes to complete the game and win your release from the room. The idea of this game is […]

Heartbreak Hotel, The Jetty 3 Stars Spending an evening in a series of dimly lit storage containers on a jetty off the beaten path in a big city sounds more like the plot to a Criminal Minds episode than a theatrical wonderland, but there’s a surprising amount to enjoy about the show currently taking […]

The Lord Stanley is a wonderful little theatre venue in North London. The food menu is nothing short of outstanding, and there’s currently plenty on the theatrical menu as well – including a strong performance of Jean-Paul Sartre’s excellent No Exit. There are no surprises in this performance of the classic Sartre piece, but it is […]

Espresso at The Drayton Arms Theatre Espresso is a touching tale of love, loss and the ties and obligations of family in a modern day Canadian-Italian family. It is a story intertwined with Catholic guilt, sensuality and the inability to run away from your past. In the play we meet Rosa, a young woman who […]

Harriet and Paul meet in the waiting room of a hospital. A chance encounter or so it seems. As the conversation flows, they realise they may have more in common than they thought, and that this meeting was no coincidence. John Bowden’s The Waiting Room is a gem of a play. There’s tension, sympathy and an odd – but […]